Sunday, July 12, 2009

Money & Business

Capital Commerce

A First Look at (Sarah) Palinomics

September 02, 2008 01:55 PM ET | James Pethokoukis | Permanent Link | Print

Jimmy P. at the RNC —"Oh yeah, she gets it," is how one economic conservative described to me last night the economic philosophy of Sarah Palin. By "get it," this person meant that Palin sees the value of low taxes and reduced spending. This, for instance, from her 2006 campaign:

As Mayor and CEO of the booming city of Wasilla, my team invited investment and encouraged business growth by eliminating small business inventory taxes, eliminated personal property taxes, reduced real property tax mill levies every year I was in office, reduced fees, and built the infrastructure our businesses needed to grow and prosper

Among her tax other reductions, courtesy of the Cato Institute, were a $20 million tax credit for film production in the state, a $2 million repeal in tires taxes, a $40 million suspension of the state fuel tax, and a 50 percent cut in the annual business license fee. Plus, there was a $1,200 tax rebate that came from raising taxes on oil companies. Now that last bit sticks in the craw of conservatives. But pro-Palin forces point out that those tax hikes merely reversed some tax breaks obtained by bribery. And take note of what superblogger Cary Wesberry found when she actually read the details of the tax increase.

The tax raises when oil prices are high, and falls when oil prices are low. This give amazing incentive for the oil companies to produce more oil, which increases supply, and lowers prices for everyone including the taxes they themselves pay the state. When oil prices are low the tax moves to a 10 percent tax on the gross, instead of the net tax of 25 percent when prices are high. Instead of, not in addition to. The oil companies in Alaska with the Palin proposal pay the state minus their operating expenses along with pipeline and tanker charges. In this way, the oil companies are not taxed for the cost of doing business.

Me: And don't forget she was apparently a Steve Forbes supporter in 1996 and has spoken favorably of Ron Paul. While economic conservatives surely want to hear much more from her, they see things right now as "so far, so good."

Tags: economics | presidential election 2008 | running mates | Sarah Palin

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Reader Comments

gerbil nation

Interesting how the media has made Palin a household brand name in less than three weeks. Problem is you have to listen and eat up all that Gibson Palin food to be in the (so called election game). People are like that though they split up in teams at the office like gerbils on treadmills all easy prey for what ever stage the media wants to set up. In this case its the republican stage. As far as crowd management goes the republicans have been resting up for the end of this (so called) democratic race. From here on out its an insult contest and has nothing to do with what will happen in the end game.

Sarah

GOOD FOR MCCAIN! HE IS A VERY INTELLEGANT MAN AND OBAMA IS GOING DOWN! GOD BLESS AMERICA AND THE MCAIN/PALIN PRESIDENCY. SAREH TEH NEXT PRESIDENT AND FIRST WOMAN PRESIDENT OF 2012. GOOD BUY HILLARY!

Palin

You must not have a brain to consider voting for Palin is a no brainer.

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About the Capital Commerce Blog

Send an E-mail to mbandyk@usnews.com.

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital. Reach him by email at mbandyk@usnews.com.

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